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photoshop still uses all the RAM allocated when all the pictures are closed

New Here ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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I have an issue with the Photoshop program eating up all the memory I allocated to it even after I close all pictures.

What kind of cache is that? Am I supposed to restart Photoshop from time to time to clean up the cache and clean the memory?

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

LEGEND , Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

Bear in mind it is virtual memory. This is not at all the same thing as RAM. Almost all the memory given to Photoshop may be swapped out to disk when it is idle, leaving all RAM available. This will only happen if other apps actually need the RAM, not earlier to look tidy.

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Community Expert ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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That is normal. You set the maximum memory Photoshop can take and Photoshop will gradually use up to that maximum.

Chris Cox , an ex Photoshop guru and engineer, once explained that Photoshop retains the memory to speed up processing. It will give memory back if demanded by the OS.

You don't need top do anything.

Dave

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New Here ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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Thank you very much for for your answer. Since now Photoshop is not the only program behaving that way (the same Google Chrome does - just puts everything possible to cache) I am just curios how the programs decide who gives the system some memory back when it needs it for some other processes. And from the general slowness of everything (after together they eat up to 94% of my RAM) I have a feeling that it takes time for them to decide on that :).

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Community Expert ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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Free RAM is wasted RAM - right? It doesn't do anything good just sitting there. Ideally it should all be in use at all times.

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Community Expert ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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Yes, this is by design. As long as you set the memory allocation sensibly, leaving 2-6 GB for other apps and processes, it's not a problem. It's just perceived to be a problem when people expect memory use to go down.

Do note, however, that plugins like ACR run in their own address space, separate from the main Photoshop app. So factor that in.

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LEGEND ,
Sep 24, 2017 Sep 24, 2017

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Bear in mind it is virtual memory. This is not at all the same thing as RAM. Almost all the memory given to Photoshop may be swapped out to disk when it is idle, leaving all RAM available. This will only happen if other apps actually need the RAM, not earlier to look tidy.

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